On Tue, Sep 17, 2002 at 11:41:44AM +0100, Alan Cox wrote:> On Tue, 2002-09-17 at 09:20, Andre Hedrick wrote:> > MORONS that think the drive vendors are not clued into the issue.> > I have to read and vote on NASTY proposals, whose intent is to check for> > G-Force damage. If you think that record is not findable, even if you> > Sounds good news for honest users. What it does want though is the> ability of users to check that data when the disk arrives, because we> have delivery people, and they think that if looks like a box its> probably a football.

No. Sounds _bad_ news for honest users. Lets be realistic here.Parcel company uses package as a football, then delivers it.

How many parcel companies will wait while you unpack the hard drive,dismantle your machine, connect the drive, power it up and check tosee if the drive has suffered too much shock?

Yep, that's right, none. If you try to, the parcel delivery personwill get really ratty. So you sign for it after checking that theoutside box is undamaged.

Then you find out that its been used in the world cup. You try toreturn it to the vendor, but the vendor says its your fault fordropping the drive. You protest, but the vendor refuses to listenbecause they've got their technology that says so in their product.

So, its NOT great for honest users. Its another form of "DigitalRights Management."